WASHINGTON (Reuters)
—As U.S. National Security Agency Director Mike Rogers seeks
to repair the damage to the agency caused by leaks about
its electronic spying programs, the abuses of government
revealed in the wake of the Watergate scandal are very
much on his mind.

As a teenager growing up in Chicago in the 1970s, Rogers recalls
watching news broadcasts with his family and being horrified by how
the CIA, FBI and NSA had illegally spied on hundreds of thousands of
Americans.

"I can remember being very impassioned with my father, and telling
him: 'Dad, what kind of nation would we ever want to be that would
allow something like this to happen?'" Rogers recalled.

Four decades later, and six weeks into his new job as director of
the NSA, the agency is facing similar accusations: that it has used
its vast and intrusive surveillance powers to trample on privacy.

Unlike 1975's congressional investigation into intelligence
gathering by the CIA, FBI and NSA, today's allegations of rampant
U.S. surveillance have unfolded on a global scale, damaging American
relations from Brazil to Germany and Indonesia.

While Rogers dismissed direct comparisons - noting that the NSA
programs exposed by former contractor Edward Snowden last year had
all been deemed lawful - he said he understood the concerns that
have been raised about balancing individual privacy rights against
security needs.

"We have been down that road in our history, and it has not always
turned out well. I have no desire to be part of that," Rogers, 54,
told the Reuters Cybersecurity Summit in Washington.

Still, Rogers' declaration that he wants to continue the NSA's
controversial search of phone records, known as metadata, has
prompted critics to question if the new director really favors
change at all.

In his first interview since taking office, Rogers, a four-star Navy
admiral, stressed the need for transparency and accountability. To
repair the agency's ties with internet and telecom firms, as well as
U.S. allies, the NSA has to shed some of its secretive culture and
be more candid about what it is doing, he said.

Some say Rogers' position falls short of what is needed. "I don't
think it's a public relations problem. What they have is a trust
problem," said cryptography author Bruce Schneier, who worked with
the Guardian newspaper to analyze some of Snowden's documents.

Schneier said that transparency would have to be imposed from above
- either by the White House or Congress - for it to be credible.

A 'CRIPPY' RISES

Highly thought of in Navy and intelligence circles, Rogers is a
career cryptologist - a specialist in the breaking and making of
codes - with little experience in the public spotlight.

During the 70-minute Reuters interview, he seemed confident but
guarded, speaking in sharply punctuated sentences and batting away
questions about events that took place before he took over the Fort
Meade, Maryland-based NSA.

"I'm not focused on wasting my time on what was or has been," said
Rogers, who is also commander of the U.S. military's Cyber Command.

Arizona Republican Senator John McCain welcomed Roger's call for
greater transparency and accountability, but said he remained
skeptical that any administration official would be held responsible
for any NSA programs that exceeded congressional authority.

"I expect Admiral Rogers to be much more transparent," McCain told
reporters on Wednesday. "Do I believe that people will be punished?
Nobody's ever been punished for the torture of prisoners by the
CIA."

With short-cropped hair that as yet shows no signs of gray, Rogers
can be alternately deadly serious - talking about "mission sets" and
"second-order effects" - and self-deprecating.

Returning two years ago to New Trier High School in Chicago's
suburbs, where he graduated in 1977, Rogers told a class: "I was
terrible at math," according to an account in the Chicago Sun-Times.

Failing to gain admission to the U.S. Naval Academy, but determined
to be a Navy officer, Rogers enrolled in Auburn University and went
through the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps.

His career was unusual in other respects. After six years as a
surface warfare officer, considered the Navy's premier career path,
he became a cryptologist or "crippy." Rogers has now risen higher in
the Navy than any cryptologist before him.

A former senior U.S. intelligence official who knows Rogers said
talent spotters in the Navy channeled him into intelligence duties
broader than cryptology.

In 2007, he became intelligence chief for U.S. Pacific Command and
two years later, intelligence director for the Joint Chiefs of
Staff. Before becoming NSA chief, he led Fleet Cyber Command, the
Navy's cyber warfare and electronic spying unit.

Underscoring the sensitivities surrounding the NSA post, President
Barack Obama personally interviewed Rogers before nominating him for
the job.

Rogers sailed through his Senate confirmation hearing, although only
after having to explain how hackers believed to be from Iran were
able to penetrate a Navy computer network.

'A POWERFUL MESSAGE'

Rogers faces big challenges. Morale among the NSA's tens of
thousands of employees has taken a hit, and Rogers said many people
in the agency found it both uncomfortable and perplexing to be under
public scrutiny.

Retired Air Force General Michael Hayden, a former director of both
the NSA and CIA, said it was instructive that Obama chose Rogers,
and veteran NSA civilian Richard Ledgett to be his deputy, at a time
when the president was under enormous pressure to conduct a house
cleaning of the agency.

It was, Hayden said, a "vote of confidence" in the NSA and its
staff, and a sign that, despite some reforms, Obama plans no sharp
cutback in the agency's aggressive global surveillance.

"They were the obvious choices before Snowden, and they were the
choices after Snowden. This is a powerful message to send to the
workforce," Hayden said.

A second former senior U.S. intelligence official who knows Rogers
predicted he would be a "much more inclusive" leader than his
predecessor, the sometimes-combative Army General Keith Alexander,
who led the agency for more than eight years.

When Rogers is not wearing his NSA "hat," he runs Cyber Command, a
rapidly growing organization tasked with defending U.S. military
computer networks, penetrating and mapping adversary networks, and
conducting offensive cyber warfare.

Rogers, who has been married to his wife, Dana, for 29 years and has
a son in the Navy and one in college, may have days where he wishes
he had neither job.

In a video message to NSA employees after he took command, Rogers is
said to have remarked that he had promised his wife he would be
retired by now.